Space Industry and Business News  
Showdown Looms With Japanese Whalers In Antarctic, Activist Warns

Recent undated picture showing Sea Sheperd ship the Robert Hunter in Melbourne. A potentially violent showdown is looming in the icy waters of the Antarctic between shipborne activists and the Japanese whaling fleet, conservationist Paul Watson warned 10 January 2007. Sea Shepherd president Paul Watson told AFP in a satellite telephone interview from his flagship, the Farley Mowat, that he would do all he could to prevent the Japanese killing whales, including ramming their ships. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Lawrence Bartlett
Sydney (AFP) Jan 10, 2007
A potentially violent showdown is looming in the icy waters of the Antarctic between shipborne activists and the Japanese whaling fleet, a conservationist warned Wednesday. Sea Shepherd president Paul Watson told AFP in a satellite telephone interview from his flagship, the Farley Mowat, that he would do all he could to prevent the Japanese killing whales, including ramming their ships.

Watson, who expects to encounter the Japanese fleet in the Southern Ocean within days, said the 54-metre (177-foot) Farley Mowat had been fitted with a ram which could slice into the hull of a whaler.

Asked whether he would be prepared to use it, Watson, 56, replied: "Yeah, above the waterline, you know, enough damage to force them back to port.

"Last year I sideswiped the Oriental Bluebird supply vessel and drove them out of the area."

Watson said the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society was this year also deploying a second, faster ship, the Robert Hunter, a helicopter and a total of 70 crew from 14 countries against the whalers.

The International Whaling Commission imposed a moratorium on commercial whaling in 1986 but Japan has continued hunting for what it calls scientific research.

Critics reject this claim, and Japan makes no secret of the fact that the meat from the hunt winds up on dinner plates.

A fleet of six Japanese ships has been deployed to the Antarctic on an expedition to kill about 850 minke whales and 10 fin whales in this year's southern hemisphere summer, the Japanese Fisheries Agency announced.

"We're not going down to protest whaling, we're going down there to obstruct and harass and do everything we can to stop them from continuing to kill whales illegally," Watson said.

The Canadian-born activist has been accused of using violent tactics in his conservation efforts, but said he had never injured anybody.

"Yeah, we sank half of Iceland's whaling fleet in 1986, sank three Norwegian whalers, we sank two Spanish whalers. We were never charged with any crimes for this -- they were all illegally operated."

He acknowledged that his ship was unregistered and thus illegal after Belize cancelled its registration last month, but said he did not care.

"When people call us pirates I don't really have a problem with that -- we're pirates of compassion in pursuit of pirates of profit."

The Japanese fleet will also be harassed by the international conservation group Greenpeace, whose fastest ship, the 72-metre Esperanza, will leave New Zealand for the Southern Ocean on January 25.

Watson, a founder member of Greenpeace, left the organisation in 1977 after disagreements over tactics and has taken a more aggressive approach with Sea Shepherd.

"Greenpeace has become a multinational corporation," he told AFP. "They do a lot of ocean posing and pretend to solve problems but the bottom line is that they're there to raise money."

Greenpeace New Zealand executive director, Bunny McDiarmid, dismissed Watson's charges as "ridiculous", adding that the organisation was firmly committed to non-violent protest.

"We're working in an area of the world that's really remote, it's very dangerous -- the Southern Ocean is a fairly formidable place to be operating in.

"Greenpeace takes as many safety precautions as we possible can to ensure the safety of both us and the Japanese whaling fleet."

Watson's plans were also condemned by the Australian government, a strong critic of Japan's whaling programme.

"It really puts the cause of whale conservation backwards," said Environment Minister Ian Campbell.

"I implore Captain Watson to comply with the law of the sea and not do anything to put at risk other vessels on the high seas and therefore human life."

Source: Agence France-Presse

Related Links
Sea Sheperd
Follow the Whaling Debate
Follow the Whaling Debate



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


China Assures Israeli PM On Iranian Nuclear Bomb
Beijing (AFP) Jan 10, 2007
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, midway through an official visit to Beijing, said Wednesday he received a candid assurance from China that it opposes Iran having a nuclear arsenal. Speaking to reporters accompanying him on his three-day visit, Olmert said he was "positively surprised by the things I heard" during a 90-minute meeting with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao.







  • 10000 Chinese Domain Names Vanish Amid Web Chaos
  • The Internet -- A Fragile System Threatened By Natural Disaster
  • Internet Resumption Still Shaky After Taiwan Quake

  • India Tests Technology For Space Vehicles
  • PSLV Successfully Launches Four Satellites
  • Arianespace To Launch ProtoStar I
  • India To Launch Latest Space Rocket

  • China Gives Rare Glimpse Of Homegrown Jet Fighter

  • Boeing To Begin Second Phase Of Enhanced Polar System Payload Study
  • HisdeSat To Provide Communications Services For The Belgium Defence Ministry

  • New Stars Shed Light On The Past
  • DOE Office Of Science Awards 95 Million Hours Of Supercomputing Time To Advance Research
  • Integral Systems Awarded Contract For Taiwan's NSPO Ground Segment
  • New Molecules Fastest Ever For Optical Technologies

  • Amazon Founder Recruiting For Private Space Program
  • Space Command Civilian Volunteers To Deploy Down Range

  • QuikScat Shows Rough Seas And Atmospheric Conditions At Time Of Two Java Sea Disasters
  • Japanese Scientists Discover Huge Undersea Lava Plateau
  • Raytheon Delivers VIIRS Sensor Engineering Development Unit
  • Northrop Grumman To Develop System Requirements For USAF Alternate Infrared Sat System

  • BAE Systems Demonstrates Passive Geo-location Technology
  • Mobile Navigation More Accessible Than Ever
  • Russian Defense Ministry Lifts GLONASS Restrictions
  • BAE Systems Demonstrates Passive Geo-location Technology

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement